Showing posts with label BankReg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BankReg. Show all posts
April 11, 2017
Sir, Miles Johnson writes: “Since their inception, financial markets have been driven by greed and fear. No matter how advanced technology becomes, human nature isn’t changing.” “AI investment can ape intelligence, but it will always lack wisdom” April 11.
I am not sure, as is I might prefer a reasonably intelligent artificial intelligence to regulate our banks.
BankReg.AI would begin by asking: What are banks? What are they for? An answer like “to keep our money safe” would not suffice, because for that a big vault in which to store our savings would seem a cheaper alternative than a bank. So BankReg.AI would most probably, sooner or later, be fed that not so unimportant info that banks are also supposed to allocate credit efficiently to the real economy. As a consequence the current risk weighted capital requirements concocted by the Basel Committee would not have even been considered because these very much distort the allocation of credit.
Then BankReg.AI would ask: What has caused all bank crisis in the past” After revising all empirical evidence it would come up with: a. Unexpected events (like devaluations), b. criminal behavior (like lending to affiliates) and c. excessive exposures to something that was erroneously perceived as safe. As a consequence the Basel Committee’s current capital requirements, lower for what is dangerously perceived as safe than for what is innocuously perceived as risky, would never ever have crossed BankReg.AI’s circuits.
@PerKurowski
April 07, 2017
More important than air traffic control is to place bank regulation in a public/private non-profit entity
Sir, Gillian Tett discusses the head of the US Council of Economic Advisers’, Gary Cohn, plan to take the air traffic control system away from the Federal Aviation Administration and place it in a non-profit entity, funded by public and private finance. “Canada inspires US reform plans to take off”, April 7.
Sounds like a good idea but, much more important for both America and Canada, would be to place bank regulations in the hands of such an entity… like a BankReg.org!
I mean would BankReg.org have gotten away, like current bank regulators have, with regulating banks without defining the purpose of banks? No way Jose!
I mean would BankReg.org have gotten away, like current bank regulators have, to regulate banks without empirical analysis of what has caused the bank crises in the past? No way Jose!
I mean would BankReg.org have gotten away, like current bank regulators have, with making it harder than it always has been for “risky” SMEs and entrepreneurs to access bank credit? No way Jose!
I mean would BankReg.org have gotten away, like current bank regulators have, with risk-weighing the Sovereign with 0%, and We the People with 100%, and thereby through the Bathroom Window introducing runaway statism? No way Jose!
I mean would BankReg.org have gotten away, like current bank regulators have, with risk-weighing the dangerous corporate AAA rated with 20%, while assigning a 150% risk weight to the so innocuous below BB- rated? No way Jose!
I mean would BankReg.org have gotten away, like current bank regulators have, with giving banks incentives to finance the “safe” basements were our unemployed kids can live over those, who though riskier, could provide our kids with the jobs they need in order to also have kids and basements? No way Jose!
I mean would those working in BankReg.org have gotten away, like current bank regulators have, with not having some psychological tests made on them in order to guarantee their suitability? No way Jose!
I mean would BankReg.org have gotten away, like current bank regulators have, with causing the 2007-08 crisis without suffering any consequences for it… in some cases even being promoted? No way Jose! We would have sued and fined its technocrats for
their last socks!
I mean would FT have treated BankReg.org as leniently as it has treated the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision, the Financial Stability Board, IMF and other clearly failed bank regulators? No way Jose!
I mean would FT have treated BankReg.org as leniently as it has treated the Basel Committee for Banking Supervision, the Financial Stability Board, IMF and other clearly failed bank regulators? No way Jose!
@PerKurowski
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)